1. What the claim is saying
The post you quoted asserts:
- A woman is “caught lying”
- There is a “$29 million mistake”
- Her facial expression proves guilt or rage
- Political insult toward “leftists”
2. Fact check of the key claim: “$29 million mistake”
Status:
Unverified / missing context
- There is no evidence in the provided material identifying what the $29 million refers to
- No source document, audit, court case, or official report is cited
- Viral posts like this often:
- strip context from hearings or budgets
- confuse “allocation,” “overpayment allegation,” or “estimate” with confirmed loss
- or exaggerate partial figures
Important rule:
A dollar figure in politics is meaningless without:
- who calculated it
- what agency reported it
- whether it is alleged, estimated, or confirmed
Right now, none of that is provided.

So the claim is
not verifiable as stated
3. “Caught lying” claim
Status:
Not established
To factually say someone was “caught lying,” you would need:
- proven false statement
- verified intent or contradiction in sworn testimony or official record
A clip showing disagreement, questioning, or political confrontation is
not proof of lying.
4. “Look at her face / she is enraged”
Status:
Subjective interpretation
- Facial expressions do not reliably prove emotion or intent
- This is a common form of confirmation bias framing
- It is opinion, not evidence
5. “Leftists will fall for anything”
Status:
Political generalization
- This is a broad stereotype about millions of people
- It is not testable or factual
- It reflects commentary, not evidence
6. What this post actually is
Based on structure and language, this is:
Not a news report
Not a verified financial claim
A political meme / commentary clip
Likely relying on missing or decontextualized information
Bottom line
- The $29 million claim is not verifiable from what is shown
- The accusation that she is “caught lying” is not proven
- Emotional interpretation of her expression is subjective, not factual
- The post is primarily political commentary framed as fact